Hammond Times, Volume 5, Number 94, Hammond, Lake County, 7 October 1910 — Page 4

THE TRIES.

jd riday, Oct. 7, 1910.

THE TilWiES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDING THE GARY EVEHITfO TIMES EDITION, THE UKB COVWTT TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION. THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES EVENING EDITION AND THE TIMES SHORTISH EXTRA, ALL. DAILT NEWSPAPERS PUBLISHED BT THE LAKE COUNTT PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANT. ' The Lake County Ttmea "Enterei as ieconfl cl&ta matter Juns JS, 190. at thm postornea at -Hammond, Indiana, under the Act of Congress. March 8, The Gary Evening Tims "Entered as second class matter October 6. ltOS. at the postofflce at Hammond, Indiana, under the Act J Congress, March , XI7, MAIN OFFICE HAMHOXD, ISD, TELEPHONE, 111 11. EAST CHICAGO AND INDIANA HARBOR 1TELEPIIONBJ Mi GARY OFFICE REYNOLDS BLDG TELEPHONE 1ST. BRANCHES EAST 'CHICAGO, INDIANA HARBOR, WHITING, CROWS POINT, TOLLESTON AND LOWELL. , JTKAKLY , , SS.O0 HALK YEARLY 1Jt0 tSlNULE COPIES ONE CENT LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER NEWS

PAPER IN THE CALUMET REGION. CIRCULATION BOOKS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT ALL TIMES. ', j 1 "f - 1 " 1 1 " ' 1 TO SUBSCRIBERS Readers of THE TIMES are reelected to faver the acesaeat by report In a; any trreajnlartttea In dellvertaisT. Comnualeate with te Ctrenlatlem Department. COMMUNICATIONS. THE TIMES will print all communication on subjects f areneral latereai to the people, whea sack eansnaaloatioaa - ara alxaed by the writer, hat wUl reject all eommaaicatleaa not eia-aed, a matter what their merits. Thla precaution Is taken to avoid misrepresentations. THE TIMES Is published In the heat Interest of the people, and tta attsa paces alwaya Intended to promote the Breneral welfare of the public at larjr

RANDOM THINGS a FLINGS

SHAKE out the mothballs!

THE common "peepul' this year do

not care how much the politicians paw

the green sward. LOOK your wifie in the eye and tell her the truth, but be sure you look her in the right eye. HOWEVER, it will take a good many democratic dances to furnish money for the democratic campaign. HOWEVER, if football is to be tam

er this year, remember that we still have the college yells with us.

EVER notice that some of the faces In corset and lingerie ads do not im

press you very much as being very intellectual

AND the modern joy ride is nothing

to the one you used to take In a shady

lane with a sweet girl and an old liv

lery horse, Ah, no!

KERMIT Roosevelt has blown back

from Europe without any ado whatever being made about it. Small fav-

ors thankfully received.

ONE thing about an airship, when

WHY NOT BE FAIR? J Is it no longer possible to be fair in politics? All the rancor and bitterness of the democratic campaign in this county, and in this district, are being centered on Congressman E. D. Crumpacker,

the ablest, the most loyal and the most respected representative that the J WOmen get to using them, they will

district ever had in congress.

Orders have gone out to concentrate the fight on Judge Crumpacker and ping oft them backwards.

they are being carried out faithfully and to shameless degree, despite the I .

fact that Judge Crumapcker is carrying on his campaign with the dignity I PURE food lecturer says the im-

wnlch invests bis high office. Jportant thing is not what we eat, but

inrougn tne medium oi too Kooy-noDertson suDsimzea press Dureau, oy I how to eat it The important thing is

w-ay of the Benton Review, the grossest kind of misrepresentation, is car-Jhow to pay for what we eat.

ried on and the worst kind of lies are being disseminated throughout the confines of the district about the distinguished republican, who has so splendidly represented this district. We cannot believe that so estimable a gentleman as John B. Peterson of Crown Point, Mr. Crumpackers opponent, is responsible for these attacks on Mr. Crumpacker's honor, but they seem to have the sanction of some one in authority and they are bound to react a hundred-fold before election day. Personalities never elected any candidate and voters in this well-posted generation ought to be given credit for at least a little common-sense.

Judge Crumpacker's reputation is not confined to Indiana. It knows no north, south, east or west. He is a commanding figure' in the nation. He is a leader in the republican party of the United States. He is an intimate with Former President Roosevelt and a personal friend of Mr. Taft's He is held by them in highest esteem. The pot-shots of the notorious Roby and Robertson of that vile Wheatfield Telephone, long since in its grave, will never injure Judge Edgar Crumpacker with the thinking .voter. - The republicans of the Tenth district have a duty and a trust to preform. It is to send Congressman Crumpacker back to Washington with the biggest majority ever given. The man who claims to be a republican and does not vote for Judge Crumpacker is a sorry republican. He is an lngrate to republican principles. The Tenth district congressman is a republican republican, not a democratic republican. He has been making speeches over the district which, if followed suit by other campaigners, would cement the party into a compact fighting organization, which would sweep everything before it. He does not know what it is to sit on the fence or compromise. The man who calls him a standpatter doesn't know what he is talking about. As pointed out repeatedly by this paper, Judge Crumpacker worked for tariff revision and against Cannonism long before some of the so-called insurgents did so.

KERN CHARGED BRIBERY. Lest you forget. These are the charges made by John W. Kern, candidate for United States senator on the democratic ticket, against United States Senator B. F. Shively, , They were made Dec, 26, 1909, and published all over the country. "Forty-four democratic members of the legislature ' gave me pledges of their support their constituents required It, When I seemed sure of the nomination te brewers stridently manifested a lively interest in the situation. It was proposed that th,e democrats, meeting in caucus, cast a secret ballot. I understood what that meant pledged members of the legislature could vote for the brewery candidate, whoever he happened to be, and no one would know it. Eight men were purchased and the second ballot went through. I received thirty-six votes and Benjamin F. Shively, atttorney for the brewersi was nominated. I think I know the names of the eight men who were bought up." Mr. Kern has repeatedly since then reiterated the damning charges. Since he" was made the nominee, he has been silent. Not a move for an investigation has been made. The democratic papers have nothing to say. More significant yet, not a word has been heard from Senator Shively asking' for an investigation of the charge that sullies his honor and pillories him Vefore the country as the beneficiary of a great crime. Kern is the man who is opposing Senator Beveridge. What do you think about the Kern senatorial scandal?

temper, cringing before It even before you speak to them.

I met a teacher the other day who has taught fifty-six years In the primary schools of her native town. She is a wonderfully successful teacher, having often been offered large sums to teach and superintend In other parts of the country, and despite the nerve strain of teaching of which we are totd so much is sill young and beautiful. Her prime rule of discipline is this: "Never let myself feel out of temper because if I do It instantly upsets the whole room and starts more mischief than I can stop in an hour. If I can't keep from feeling that way I leave the room for a few minutes until I can." N Some time when you have several times failed to get the correct number on the telephone and have rung again very impatiently, notice how quickly the telephone girl's "number" gives back your tenseness even before you speak. Half the bad temper and nerves in the world I verily believe are caused simply and solely by the presence of the other half. Wouldn't It be splendid if people In a nervous, overwrought state could be temporarily quarantined by law? And since that's Impossible, whenever you are the ailing one, why not decree the quarantine by law of yourself? .

"THIS DATE IN HISTORY" October 7.

1763 Cape Breton was annexed to

Nova Scotta.

have to be awfully careful about Step- 11779 Col. William Jasper killed dur-

THE great trouble with gome politicians nowadays is that they seem to think a man is an easy mark or he couldn't believe everything they tell him. . THEY found a forty-pound Jaw bone

out west the other day. We hasten to

assure you that it didn't belong to the man who has been doing so much talking recently,

MEN are funny creatures. They

ing the assault on Savannah.

1780 Americans defeated the British

at battle of King's Mountain, South Carolina.

1805 Lewis and Clarke entered Oregon

territory at Lewlston.

1812 Napoleon defeated the

ui tne panie oi ine jaosnowa. statue

1849 Edgar Allen Poe, the poet, died

In Baltimore. Born in Boston, Jan. 19, 1809.

UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-l-A-N-A

REPLICA OP WALLACE, The life-size bronze statue of Gen-

Russians eral Lew Wallace. , a reDlica of the

that was unveiled. January 11

of this year, in statuary hall at Washington, has been put in place in the

I

1863 All the church bells in Macon, Wallace homestead at Crawfordsville.

Ga., taken down and moulded into The statue was made by A. O'Connor, of cannon for the Confederate service. Paris, who also made the statue in

1879 W. H. Pope of Prince Edwards Washington. Henry L. Wallace, of In-

Island, one of the "Fathers of the dlanapolis, son of the general, had the Confederation," died. Born May 29, statue placed there as a monument to 1825. ithe memory of his father. The statue.

1S94 Andrew J. Curtin. governor of which stands twelve feet - hieh is

Pennsylvania, died in Bellefonte, mounted on a stone base, fourteen feet

Pa, Born there April 22, 1817.

"THIS IS 51 V BOTH BIRTHDAY" Sir Harvey Adamson. Sir Harvey Adamson, the new Lieu-

square. It stands just west of the library in the Wallace homestead, facing the south. The work of constructing the large brick wall around three sides of the

win stop on me street ana listen to a tenant uovernor or tsurma, was Dorn homestead grounds has been oomnleted

grlndorgan half an hour at a time and " ana nas BPeni ine greater unuer the direction of the son

yet they are too busy to even be civil

to a poor book agent. -

A DEMOCRATIC paper says in 48-

point head letter that the democratic

ball at Gary was a "howling, success."

Are we to Infer that but no.

STILL knicking on the water supply

Let us be just. After being boiled

and filtered through mothballs it does

I very well for the bath, provided the

tub Is kept well scrubed- .

. - '

THE appearance of a Paris hobble

If some of the democratic editors, who are now slandering Congressman skirt in Logansport raised a riot, and

part of his life in the service of the

I far eastern possession of Great Britain.

After completing his education at

Aberdeen University he entered the Indian service in 1875 and two years

I later joined the Burma Commission.

From 1877 until 1901 he served success

ively as assistant commissioner, settle

COAL MINE ON FIRE. Hartshorn's coal mine, near Danville,

caught fire yesterday. All the miner

were taken out safely. The fire is confined to the lower level and the managers say that, as the mine la fireproof,

there is no danger. The fire waa caus-

ment officer, deputy commissioner and d by smudge, but just how it began

judicial commissioner of Burma. From

1897 until 1900 he was in command of the Upper Burma Rifle Volunteers. In

1903 he became a member of the council

of the Viceroy of India and se'eral

months ago he was selected by the King to fill the Important post of

is not known now. Manager Harhorn

said, just before noon, fiat he was positive every man had been taken out of

the mine. CROPS SWEPT A WAY

Rain which had been falling heavily

tor forty hours around Bedford has

cession to Sir Herbert Thirkell White.

probably the appearance of a Logans-

port skirt in Paris would raise a riot

there.

bOMkHOW boys never want to

grow up to be pirates these days.

.

meres not enough money in it to make the pirate business profitable

enough.

THE latest difinition of a stand-pat-

Crumpacker, would only turn back to their files, they would tell the people,

if they were honest, that Mr. Crumpacker and Mr. Cannon were at sword's points long, long ago, because he condemned certain features in the Payne tariff bill. How many democratic epeahers today are traveling up and down the country advocating a tariff commission? Do they know that Judge Crumpacker is the author of the tariff commission bill now before the country and that Instead of hiding his light under a bushel ought to claim credit for it? The tariff commission is his handiwork as members of the last congress know. It means a vast deal to the people of this great industrial hive whom

tney snail send to congress, vital to us progress, as tne next two years ter and a progressive is: The standshall be, it would be a pity were a man without any experience In the intri- patter is a person who comes to a cacies and finesse of getting legislation, tied hand and foot by a minority, stop and can't get started, and proand that inexperience should be sent to Washington to do thing3 for this gressive is one who gets started and

great district. can't stop. . Admitting that Mr. Peterson is a gifted gentleman with great legal

talent and a delightful personality, a congressman must have other quail- WE do not believe that the boy who fications to represent this district in its vital hour in the seats of the mighty, washes his face and hands and

and these Mr. Crumpacker has proved axiomatically that he possesses to a brushes the back of his shors before profound degree. he goes to school without a jawing

Let not the republicans of the Tenth district forget that Mr. Peterson from his mother, will ever grow up to

" is a democrat and Mr. Crumpacker a republican. Let them not forget that be a great man. they sent him to congress last time with a majority of 6,000 and that if he J

deserved tnat majority two years ago, he deserves more than that next AN Italian duke who has twice

month. chosen a wife in this country says,

Judge Crumpacker belongs to the party which always goes forward. It "An American girl can be her hus

is the part? of evolution, while Mr. Peterson's democratic party has stood band's equal in every respect." Cases Etill rnd even gone backward in the last decade. have been known in which she was a And who ever heard of Mr. Peterson in democratic politics until this lap or two ahead sententiously. adds a

summer? Consider these things seriously and with forethought

Lieutenant Governor of Burma, in sue- ceased, but conditions are still threaten

ing. Creeks have become swollen riv

ers and much damage has been done

White river is a booming flood, having risen twelve feet since yesterday morn-

! ing. The stream was rising at the rate of six inches an hour today. The wat-

I er is full of pumpkins, corn and other

r

LABOR NEWS

and Chile average

contemporary.

Wages in Brazil

80 cents a day. - 1

Europe is far ahead of the United

States in providing pensions for civil employes.

A union men's grocery store was

opened in the Labor Temple, at Los Angeles, Calif., recently.

The convention of the Brotherhood of

Locomotive Engineers will meet in

Birmingham, Ala., Oct. 12 to 15.

The National Sailors and Firemen's

Union of England complains that the i

ship owners refuse to agree to the

establishment of a conciliation board.

In the boot and shoe trades, with lb2,922 worers, the average weekly wage is $7.96. Men over 18 receive $9.11; women, $6.13; children under 16, $3.40. The Arkansas State Federation of Labor is active in urging upon the people of that state an amendment to the Constitution providing for the initiative and referendum. Comparing the deaths in coal mines

of the United States in the last ten years with those o Belgium in the same

period, it is shown that 13,858 lives

would have been saved in this country

f the United States had Belgium's

death rate.

--ft-

ROOSEVELT ON TAFT.

Is ex-President Roosevelt against Mr. Taft or for him in a half-hearted way? We think not. In his speech at Albany the other day he outlined the work that has been done by the Taft administration. He mentioned what has been done. This is, and we use Roosevelt's own words: "The amendments to the interstate commerce law; beginning of a national legislative program for the exercise of the taxing power In connection with big corporations doing an Interstate business; the appointment of a commission to frame measures to do away with the evils of overcapitalization and improper and excessive issues of stocks and bonds; the law providing for publicity of campaign expenses; the establishment of the maximum and minimum tariff provisions and the exceedingly able negotiations of the Canadian and other treaties in accordance therewith; the adoption of the policy of providing for a disinterested revision of tariff schedules through a highclass commission of experts which will treat each schedule purely on Its own merits with a view both to protecting the consumer from excessive prices and to securing for the American producer, and especially the American wageworker, what will represent the difference of cost in production here as compared with the cost of production In countries where labor is less liberally rewarded; the extension of the laws regulating safety appliances for the protection of labor; the creation of a bureau of mines these and similar laws, backed up by executive action, reflect high credit upon all who succeeded in putting them in their present form upon the statute books

SENATOR Lorimer says he wants a vindication. Senator Shively doesn't care, however. He's willing to let the Kern bribery charges go and probably opines that the voters think John W. Kern a peevish old man who doesn't know what he is talking about. JOHN W. Kern said in a speech the other night: "If I am elected senator and do not do more in two years than

Beveridge has in twelve, I will resign." Do you think by that time that you will be able to tell the names of those eight bribers, John, that you blatted

r.bout so much when you were beaten?

iS IT may be true and it may not, but

a Broadway father said to his young

hopeful the other day: "Now, my lit

tle man, "you must remember that

whever you go and whatever you do, there is always an eye that is forever

fixed upon you. Do you know whose

eye it is, Bobbie?"

"Yes, it's Mither Rootherfelt," said

Bobby,

crops that had not been gathered and

were washed away. All corn bottoms are inundated and heavy damage has

been done.

- BOY DOES .MAN'S WORK. Ralph Clark, aged seven, son of Ben Clark, a farmer who lives near Columbus, objects to being called a boy. In

stead he would rather be known by the name of a little man, and that is what his ather calls him. The boy is no larger than ordinary seven-year-old boys, but all summer he has done a

man's work on the arm. He hitches teams and unhitches them and feeds the stock, and during the summer he drove a disc plow, handled a mower and reaper and worked with a thrashing machine.

DIAMONDS IN FLl'E. Following a confession by Thomas Llttrell to the St. Louis police, Lorenzo Raley and George A. Klein, engravers

for Bitterman Bros., of Evansville, jewelers, admitted to the police and their employers today that they and Littrell were trying to dispose of $2,000 worth of diamonds which were lost in the store three weeks ago. Some of the

stones were found In a flue at Klein's home. Littrell had some of the diamonds when he was arrested at St. Louis Tuesday.

The Evening Chit-Chat By RUTH CAMERON

E. C. MINAS CO. Best Grocery Bargains in Hammond.

SUGAR Best granulated, with order of 1.00 or more (flour or soap

not included), 10 lbs for

48c

CANNED GOO DS Any of our standard brands of high grade goods, such as Tomatoes, Corn ,Peas or Pumpkin, 3 cans for 25c ; Q C , dozen cans UuC

SWEET POTATOES Genuine Jer

sey Sweet Potatoes, 3 pounds for ,

CHEESE Fancy Limburger in 1-

pound bricks or finest Brick Cream, per lb ... ,

10c r in 120c

PEANUT BUTTER Finest Peanut

Butter, per pound

14c -Fancy spring 16k;

CHICKEN Chicken, per pound .

SOAP American Family or Fels Naphtha, with grocery order, 1 Qft 5 bars for UU STARCH Best Laundry Gloss

Starch, f ft 3 pounds for Jy

COFFEE Minas blend, one of the

btst values for quality and Aft. price, per lb.... 4LfcC PICKLES New Sweet Sour or Dill

Pickles,,. , per dozen

PEACHES Fine Pennant brand, per can

quality Peaches,

9c :hes,

15c

CRANBERRIES Fancy Cape Cod

Cranberries, 2 quarts for

BACON Strips of very Bacon, about 3 pounds each, per lb

BUTTER Finest Elgin Creamery

Butter, our well known brand, per lb

15c fancy 20c

33c

TEA Very strong GunPowder Tea, priced QOfi specially low. . . OUu

ROLLED OATSOats, 3 packages for. . .

-Quaker 25c

SPjCES Finest Spices, per pound

mixed Pickling

RICE Fancy Carolina Head Rice,

3 pounds for

MAC K 5 R EL Fancy, Spanish Mackerel, eaeh. ..............

PEARS Fancy heavy syrup, per dozen

Bartlett Pears in

20c l Rice,

20c

8(T

13c

Double Cijupons on Teas & Coffees Candy Specials

Saturday Chococate Day All our regular 40c cream and nut center

Chocolates, per pound

25c

Large Soft Jelley regular 20c value, per pound.

Gum

Drops, 12c

Just received another shipment of

our famous Fudges, assorted flavors

regular 20c value, per pound

12c

Mint and Wintergreen Wafers, regular 20c value, per pound

Cream 12c

Jelley Beans, with eoft jelley center, regular 15c value, rt per pound JJQ 2 Package of Crackerjack, 1 Pack

age of "Gee Whiz" all three for

Fruit Tablets with pure fruit Rav

ing, regular 20c value," per pound

10c lit flav-

12c

The Russel Packing Company 9130 COMMERCIAL AVENUE, SOUTH CHICAGO. Sell more meat at retail than any meat market in the United States. You can save from 3 to 5 cents on each pound of meat your purchase. It will pay you to come many miles to trade there. 1,000 different articles in meat to select from. We retail at wholesale price.

A palpable atmosphere of temper. Do you know I have recently come to believe that that exists not in

the new thought sense but actually as some kind of another wave and with

just as tangible an effect as an east wind or a mist. I was In a home the other day when the man of the house came in over-wrought, nervous, and

out of temper. His three children had been playing together quite happily

all the afternoon. He had not been in the house five minutes before there

was an abrupt change in them. It was because of anything he said to them. Indeed, he scarcely spoke to them at all merely passed through the room and out into the next room where he sat talking with his wife In the sharp, tense voice that betrayed his state of mind. In ten minutes those children who had been quite in harmony all the afternoon had begun to quarrel with each other, and in half an hour their mother, herself transformed from the tranquil, happy person she had been before her husband's arrival, had sent one of them to bed sobbing and left the other two sulking1 and at odds with each other. All simply a result of the atmosphere of temper that that man brought home with him. People who ride nervous, highbred horses say that it Is unsafe to ride them when you are out of temper, because they catch your mood so quickly

and become fractious and unmanageable. Dogs respond instantly to bad

For more than 25 years

chlosser9s

Oak Grove Butter

has been the standard for quality and excellence. Your grocer or butcher can supply you.

SCHLOSSER BROS.,

Wholesale Produce. SOUTH CHICAQO.

BESS